by Jana Kadah – Local and state leaders, housing experts, businesses and social justice advocates from all nine Bay Area counties have united to create a Regional Action Plan that aims to house 75 percent of the area’s homeless population by 2024.
After a year of planning, the multi-pronged strategy was announced at a virtual news conference on Tuesday.
There, Santa Clara County Supervisor Cindy Chavez, state Assemblymember David Chiu, D-San Francisco, and leaders from All Home, the nonprofit that is leading this effort, conceded that this was an ambitious goal.
The Bay Area has more than 35,000 individuals living in the region’s streets, according to a 2019 U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development report, and that number may have gone up since the pandemic’s start.
In three years, the goal is to bring that number down to 10,000 individuals.
“Anybody who’s lived in the Bay Area for any length of time knows that is a very audacious goal,” said Ken Kirkey, chief partnership officer at All Home. “But we believe it is achievable in part because the plan has an integrated approach with a simultaneous provision of things that in the past we have pitted against each other.”
The strategy has lots of moving parts but focuses on two main areas: creating more housing and preventing more people from falling into homelessness.
The Regional Action Plan, commonly referred to as RAP, has an initial focus on extremely low-income residents with an emphasis on racial equity.
“We actually are seeing more people fall into homelessness faster than we can rehouse them,” said Sherilyn Adams, executive director of the non-profit Larkin Street Youth Services. “Cost-effective investment and prevention can keep our families and our individuals stable and housed.”
To Adams and the rest of the coalition, that means providing accelerated cash payments, income-targeted rental assistance and other housing support from the state and federal level to people impacted by COVID-19.
To address the racial inequities, the coalition is calling on the state to create and expand practices to measure equity levels across California to observe progress and increase accountability for outcomes by tying funding to demonstrated progress toward closing disparities.
It also calls on counties to extend eviction moratoria for at least 60 days if the state’s moratorium, set to expire on June 30, is not extended.
The second major component of the RAP is actually getting people into interim or permanent housing.
The coalition plans to do this using what they call the 1-2-4 framework.
Essentially the plan outlines that for every one unit of interim housing built, there should be two units of permanent housing and four units of homeless prevention interventions to keep people housed.
“The one to four, that ratio is our analysis of the Bay Area homelessness population writ large,” Kirkey said. “When that is brought to a county level that might look different in Santa Clara County … than in Sonoma County.”
However, Kirkey said the coalition intends to work with individual counties to find a tailored approach.
All of the aforementioned ideas brought by the coalition are not new, but a regional, comprehensive plan with input and organizing from the Governor’s Office, local governments, philanthropic partners and many others is new, the leaders said.
And it could allow the region to be more fluid in the way that funding is used to address the trans-jurisdictional issue that is homelessness.
“By working together we’re going to be able to change the trajectory of a whole number of initiatives, including how we fund permanent supportive housing, how we fund the services that people need,” Chavez said.
“low income housing” – sounds like what they have now
if you want to help with issue stop giving homeless money and food. it may seem cruel but they need to get help from those who are able to get them the help they need. if they are given free stuff the homeless have no motivation to do anything they will just keep asking for a handout. but if they work with outreach programs who’s folks can help identify individuals and families real needs, so they can reenter society.
The same principle of “don’t feed the wildlife.” You keep feeding them, they become dependant and aggressive. Funny how we cannot use the same truth and apply it to humans… The more we give, the worse the homeless problem becomes. It is not cruel. What we are doing now by supporting folks in living this lifestyle is cruel.
You said exactly what I was going to say, so ditto that…
It will never ever happen and you have to be naive to think it can.
Anyone know the backstory on the homeless guy living at the entrance to the Pavillion? Anyone here ever stop and talk to him?
They’re kidding right? Homelessness (now called “unhoused” like illegal alien is now undocumented) is now a industry unto itself. There’s too much money involved so they will never want it to go away.
Woohoo. Another money grab that won’t work. If you guys want a volunteer for you to pay my mortgage to prevent me from going into homelessness at any point I’ll take it. Then I’ll let you know if it works.
That’s great now they won’t have to drink and do drugs on the street.They will have a nice cozy home free of charge free free free free just like the commercial on tv.I saw them the other day on Willow pass by Safeway passing the jug of booze around.All this free housing is not going to solve a thing.How about some free money for my house payment.Oh and some free booze so I don’t have to get that free at Safeway by walking out the door with it.You bunch of Political morons.There is plenty of weeds trash and old furniture laying around Concord.Make them work for a paycheck.
Another brilliant move by our social justice warriors. Can’t wait to see how many additional homeless flood into the area with the promise of more free stuff
It’s all politics. Don’t believe anything they say.
… I’ll believe it when I see it… and when it fails who will be accountable? …. no one…
OH, JOY, …. just what’s needed, committees of liberals.
Sounds suspiciously like urban engineering.
What could possibly go wrong ? ? ?
An it’ll probably only take a hundred million or so dollars and half a dozen revisions to their plans. Multiply by five or ten.
An what pretell is their position on, President Kennedy’s Community Mental Health Act of 1963 and problems it continues to create ? ? ?
“… 75 percent of the area’s homeless population by 2024.”
Hmm that reminds me,
June 30, 2004, Mayor gavin newsom pledged in ten years the worst of San Francisco’s homeless problem would be gone.
In a decade roughly $1.5 billion was spent by SF.
Remember liberals have an unlimited supply of, your money.
If you hate the problems the Government causes just wait until you see the solutions.
Waste of our money, wont work or help. Homeless will go up not down.
+1
+100 🙂
“To address the racial inequities, the coalition is calling on the state to create and expand practices to measure equity levels across California to observe progress and increase accountability for outcomes by tying funding to demonstrated progress toward closing disparities.”
Wow. More government sponsored racism.
Shhh we’re not calling it racism….
This will be as likely to succeed as using an air conditioner to reduce global warming. There are a lot of homeless people who want to be on the street, where they are free to use drugs, have pets, shoplift and generally bother everyone else.
So they will lower housing prices, rent, food and utilities cost and stop credit checks for rentals so people with bad credit can get homes too?
“The Regional Action Plan, commonly referred to as RAP, has an initial focus on extremely low-income residents with an emphasis on racial equity.”
All the homeless I see around here are crazy white men and women. There is a large community growing at the on ramp from Concord Ave. to East 680 just past the Golf Course. They have more trash than MDRR-Concord, but hey, maybe they recycle everything ???
Noticed a CalTrans truck on the shoulder of this encampment not too long ago viewing the mess that is there…now there is a new metal sign that claims something to the effect of “No Parking, No Loitering. No Trespassing” , by the tip of the triangle. Thinking they had to legally post for notification so they can move out the vagrants in a set number of days. About time.
I am currently living in a major city in the Mid-West. We have not officially relocated here, but we are seriously considering it since we have family here. Anyway, I’ve been here for a couple of months and I have only seen ONE homeless person in all that time. There are no filthy freaks on the sidewalks, no drunks asleep in the parks, no deadbeats on corners asking for handouts. The only thing I can think of is, they probably don’t hand out all the freebies here. So, either the “homeless” get their act together because they have no choice….. or they go to California where the Homeless Industrial Complex will coddle them forever.
I think it has more to do with the weather than being coddled. It’s pretty tough to survive when it’s below freezing.
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Ditto for Phoenix.
Yes, it does get cold here in the Winter. But it’s also cold in New York and their population of homeless people is estimated at 80,000. I think it’s more of a government management problem. Keep handing out free stuff – you keep getting more and more.
Talk is cheap. I won’t hold my breath.
Save time and money: Issue complimentary bus tickets to Portland.
States use CA as a dumping ground for unwanted humans.
Quaint little term in mental health circles, . . . . Bus Therapy.
sacbee https://tinyurl.com/ybh6ezf7
A little side effect from President Kennedy’s Community Mental Health Act of 1963. An for those too young to know Kennedy was a democrat.
Agreed! Send them to Portland.
I agree we need to buss all the homeless to Portland Oregon and let them have them. A bunch of crazy social justice warriors up there that will welcome them maybe they will make another chaz/chad town or whatever utopia and live in peace
if they are black, or maybe just self-identify as such, Oregon will give them money, so send them there
The average bus fare Oakland to Portland is $96. If we get 1000 people to gift five bus tickets a month for seven months, we would end the Bay Area homeless problem this year.
I’m in if you are.
They already started the process simply by giving them Covid19-84 shots. Equally sad is the fact that most of the additional populace will soon experience the same fate! Wake up people!
you can’t help people in a way that subverts their individual accountability…..what will these dummies do about the wilful alcolhics and drug addicts that choose to be homeless….just doubling down on stupid for the theatre of obsurdity
I can only imagine they’ll try to tax us to death to cover the cost of putting these people in hotels and not really fixing anything. While screaming in everyone’s ear about how they fixed the problem. Typical Democrat move.
Im sorry….you lost me as soon as you said (almost the first thing) “provide accelerated cash payments”…..says it all
Reopen the mental hospitals. Put drug addicts into mandatory rehab.
It’s not a housing problem, it’s a mental illness problem.
AD
Absolutely. Hospitals need to be reopened and Conservatorship laws need to be changed. I have been trying to to help my BiPolar family member for over four years but he prefers the “freedom”. But his demented idea of freedom is to do and say anything he wants.
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Really!!!! Many of these people live this way because they do not want to follow any rules, are rude and know they can suck off the government – especially the fools who are in office now- until we change who runs the country freebies will continue.
These folks are not prosecuted and torture the rest of us who follow the law and are forced to keep supporting these types it is taxation without representation, put bluntly.
Wake up people.
More tax money thrown at a problem .This is the only answer the democrats come up with for any problem .Nothing will change ,the homeless problem will grow and the people in charge will get rich .When that happens the good demorcat politicians will ask for more money . They will maintain homelessness not fix it .Buying votes is expensive .
They have been talking about reducing it and helping for years and it’s only gotten way worse. Billions of dollars yet its getting worse. Homeless a profitable business.
Unless they are going to put them all on a bus to Mississippi, nothing is going to change.
Who was part of the selection committee to determine “All Home, the nonprofit that is leading this effort”. What a money grab.
A quote from All Home website:
“Ken Kirkey joins All Home as the former Director of Planning for the Regional Planning Program serving the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG).”
According to transparentcalifornia, his total compensation package at MTC was somewhere about 300K/year. I’m sure all of us know how successful is MTC at solving Bay Area transportation problems. So we should have no doubts that Bay Area homelessness problem will be solved in a similar way. I. e. not at all, but at a great expense to the taxpayers and at a substantial monetary gain to Mr. Kirkey personally.
Any bets as to how many billions this 1-2-4 approach will cost?
Fire hoses, Rottweilers and riot police. Drive them from the communities of honest, working citizens. Send them to the desert or a deserted island. Give them each a bag of dope and a knife. They will solve the problem themselves.
Being homeless is one thing, being a drug abusing alcoholic transient is a whole other story.
Giving them housing with strings attached will never work, as they will generally forego because of drug use. As soon as there are requirements,
they disappear.
It’s easier to herd cats.
Those are “Newsomvilles”. Blue state equals blue tarp.
I imagine slashing funding for the homeless and enforcing every law to the letter that they break would decrease our homeless infestation.